5 Outstanding FTSE 100 Shares

Published in Investing on 4 May 2012

Each company leads its competitors on a certain metric.

I examined the investment fundamentals of the FTSE 100 to find five companies that stand out from the rest on a particular investment metric. This quick search hopefully highlights some companies worthy of further research, though it would not be wise to base an investment decision simply on one statistic.

Every dividend helps

Of all the companies in the FTSE 100, Tesco (LSE: TSCO) has the longest history of increasing its dividend to shareholders year-in, year-out. Tesco's dividend has increased from 0.4p in 1984 to 14.76p in 2012 -- an average dividend increase, per year, of 13.8%. Despite its recent troubles, Tesco is clearly one of the most successful companies in the UK today. While investors speculate over whether Tesco shares will most likely move higher or lower from here, I'm yet to hear any analyst seriously question Tesco's ability to continue increasing its dividend in the near term.

Tesco's dividend is expected to increase 2% for 2013 and again by 8% the year after. Profit forecasts follow a similar trajectory, meaning Tesco currently trades in the market on a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 9.2 and dividend of 4.8%. At today's price Tesco looks like a fantastic four-play of success, growth, yield and value all in one share.

The lowest P/E

Of all the investment ratios, P/E is the one investors consider indispensable.

When averaging out earnings forecasts for the next two years, Vedanta Resources (LSE: VED) has the lowest P/E in the FTSE 100 at 5.6 times profits.

Normally, the market leaves such miserly ratings for companies whose earnings are expected to decline significantly. Consensus forecasts, however, are for profits at the Indian mining firm to fall for 2012 before recovering significantly in 2013 to a record level of profitability. The shares also pay a 3.1% dividend. Vedanta appears to be an inexpensive blue chip, with growth ahead of it and a respectable dividend while you wait.

Expensive as chips

Computer chip designer ARM Holdings (LSE: ARM) currently trades at 37 times consensus estimates of 2012 profits making it the most highly rated share in the FTSE 100.

With high P/E stocks there is always the risk of 'valuation compression' -- the possibility that the company fails to deliver on expectations and its rating adjusts to something far more modest, crashing the share price in the process.

In the last five years ARM has never traded on a P/E below 20, but that hasn't stopped the shares reaching almost five times the price they were in 2007.

ARM is currently making hay from demand for its processors in smartphones, leading to expectations of a 60% increase in profits this year, followed by a 20% increase the year after. Total dividends to shareholders in 2011 added up to 3.5p and are expected to increase to 4p in 2012 and 4.8p in 2013 -- a tidy yield for those that have held the shares prior to the smartphone boom.

The 14% payout

With a forecast payout that puts the shares on a yield over 14.3%, hedge fund firm Man Group (LSE: EMG) is the FTSE's biggest dividend payer.

Unfortunately for shareholders, Man's flagship fund, AHL, has struggled to demonstrate the kind of returns it produced before the credit crunch, and as profits fell, the company halved its dividend in 2010. In fact, profits no longer cover Man's massive dividend, and it is the fear that Man's profits may not recover that have driven its share price to its lowest point in more than 10 years.

Yet there are grounds for optimism. Man Group remains a well-regarded operation and is frequently cited as a takeover target. A return to more normal behaviour in the financial markets would likely be very good for Man's profitability, and if investors can be convinced the dividend is sustainable around the current level then Man shares would trade far higher.

The dividend hiker

There are a collection of shares in the top tier that have recently increased their dividend payout substantially. However, some of these -- such as BP (LSE: BP) and Carnival (LSE: CCL) -- are simply restoring their dividend from a previous cut or are forecast to cut in the future, such as Fresnillo (LSE: FRES).

By my calculations, the FTSE 100 company that has increased its dividend the most this year -- without cutting the year before, or being expected to cut in the future -- is gold producer Randgold Resources (LSE: RRS).

Despite its meteoric rise in the last five years -- Randgold Resources shares are up fivefold since 2007 -- the company trades at just 13.7 times forecast profits for 2012 and 12 times the 2013 consensus figure. The dividend was doubled in 2011 is expected to continue rising, reaching 80 cents (like many miners, Randgold reports in US dollars) in 2013 -- that's four times the 2010 payout. Although the rating means Randgold shares could not be considered cheap by value investors, the successful track record and commitment to increasing returns to shareholders makes the company an almost unique blue-chip play on the precious metals boom.

He avoided techs in the dotcom bubble and banks in the credit boom. But just where is dividend expert Neil Woodford investing today? All is revealed in this free Motley Fool report -- "8 Shares Held By Britain's Super Investor".

Further investment opportunities:

> David does not own shares in any of these companies. The Motley Fool owns shares in Tesco.

Share & subscribe

Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

andybuchan 04 May 2012 , 8:47am

Totally agree on the Tesco advice. Would also note the following ups for Tesco.

a. Most of the of the stores will now be refurbished, giving a jump on competitors.

b. The Eastern markets are doing well for Tesco and likely to grow even more quickly than previously.

c. Perhaps most important, the click and collect project Tesco is working on has been incredibly successful for getting people to spend into store whilst collecting. Now they are concentrating on hugely increasing their on-line selection - this might be the most important game changer in the UK supermarket business. That 30% share might well stay in place and even increase!

pirro 04 May 2012 , 10:16am

Our local Tesco had its refit last year. No more annoying cobble stones at the car park entrance, beautiful fresh jet black tarmac everywhere, wooden trolley shelters, and a smart interior. The order of goods in the store has changed also. Booze used to be at the far end - this is replaced by shampoos etc. It has been a good upgrade on a tired store, and it still has a small wow factor whenever we go in. It was quite tired and a little dated before. We had one of the experimental Waitrose stores open around the corner a couple of years back. It is pretty smart, and the face lifted Tesco holds its own now.

Click and Collect has been massive in our area. We have no Argos etc, so it is brilliant. We actually get queues at the Direct Desk sometimes - long ones of 8+ people in December. People commonly cite the decline of Argos being due to the spending squeeze - which I am sure is a big factor - but Tesco Direct is just fantastic and I think will have played a significant role. I can pick a kids swing up with my shopping instead of having to drive 40mins + pay for parking to pick one up at Argos in the next town. Easy.

Allowing other retailers to sell via the Tesco website is also a very sensible move.

I see they have started integrating Blinkbox now - buy a DVD and get it for free on Blinkbox also.

Don't forget the bank.

philidor 04 May 2012 , 10:56am

ARM has a "tidy yield" of 0.7%, or 0.4% on your purchase price if you got in 12 years ago "prior to the smartphone boom".

I wouldn't regard this as a "tidy yield".

And by the way, if you got in 12 years ago you're still showing a capital loss of 40%.

A great company, but not necessarily a great investment.

Mari11ion 04 May 2012 , 1:19pm

Ha ha, I think that was supposed to say "tiny yield"!

ANuvver 04 May 2012 , 2:47pm

re the headline, "standing out" means you're more likely to get shot at!

mali7 04 May 2012 , 5:07pm

EMG has been highlighted in several articles recently and as good buy etc, but it keeps falling...looking at chart looks like heading towards 0p? Seriously lost faith in it now....what are the EMG management doing? Great DIV, even if cut, but if capital value drop in that speed, whats the point of a great dividend? I think a lot of patience needed now...

gezmondo 04 May 2012 , 9:41pm

the smartphone market only really took off over the last 3 yrs or so..........ARM could be bought below £1 around 2008/ start of 2009 so the yield for this year and next would be >4% and 4.8% respectively so the author David was spot on!

Join the conversation

Please take note - some tags have changed.

Line breaks are converted automatically.

You may use the following tags in your post: [b]bolded text[/b], [i]italicised text[/i]. All other tags will be removed from your post.

If you want to add a link, please ensure you type it as http://www.fool.co.uk as opposed to www.fool.co.uk.

Hello stranger

To add your own comment, please login.

Not yet registered? Register now.